religious tolerance - translation to greek
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religious tolerance - translation to greek

RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE
Religious Toleration; Religious toleration
  • Original act of the [[Warsaw Confederation]] 1573 – the official sanctioning of religious freedom in the [[Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth]]
  • [[Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen]]
  • Renan
  • Penn
  • Sculpture ''Für Toleranz'' ("for tolerance") by [[Volkmar Kühn]], [[Gera]], Germany
  • "Tomb with hands"]]  in [[Roermond]]. Jacob van Gorcum, a [[Protestant]] (of the [[Reformed Church]]), who died in 1880 and his wife Josephina, a [[Catholic]], who died in 1888, are buried in the Protestant and Catholic cemeteries respectively, but their tombs are joined  by "hands" over the wall.
  • Erasmus
  • Milton
  • The [[Maryland Toleration Act]], passed in 1649.
  • Participants make their way, to the [[King Abdullah I Mosque]] in Amman, Jordan from Our Lady Church, to attend the Voices of Religious Tolerance (VORT) conference on April 21, 2011
  • Bayle
  • Clement VI
  • Castellio
  • Tractatus Theologico-Politicus of Spinoza
  • Voltaire

religious tolerance         
ανεξιθρησκία
religious painting         
  • Mandaean]] manuscript art featuring [[Abatur]] at the scales, from the ''[[Scroll of Abatur]]''
  • The Book of Odes]], a collection of poetry complied by Confucius. This image is a section of the scroll of an unidentified artist from the 13th century, and it narrates the poem about rural living.
  • Alhambra Palace]] depicting images of intricate circle divisions and geometry
  • The [[Ardabil Carpet]], a [[Persian carpet]], [[Tabriz]], mid-16th century, depicts floral gardens shaped in a manner that reflects the Islamic symbolism of paradise.
  • Madonna]] with an Angel, painted by [[Sandro Botticelli]] (1470) and commissioned by the [[Catholic Church]] during the [[Renaissance]] in [[Florence]] (Boston, Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum)
  • Four designs depicting the symbols of oneness and unity throughout the circles partition into each woven and detailed section.
  • A specimen of Islamic sacred art: in the [[Great Mosque of Kairouan]] in [[Tunisia]], the upper part of the ''mihrab'' (prayer niche) is decorated with 9th-century lusterware tiles and painted intertwined vegetal motifs.
  • Shrine of Shah Nematollah Vali, Iran]] showing the repetitive patterns in an identical Mosque from another country.
  • Buddha statue in Sri Lanka.
  • An example of Tibetan Buddhist art: Thangka Depicting [[Vajrabhairava]], c. 1740
  • Virgin and Child. Wall painting from the early [[catacombs]], Rome, 4th century.
ART THAT IS RELIGIOUS IN THEME
Ecclesiastical Art; Art, Ecclesiastical; Ecclesiastical art; Spiritual Art; Sacred art; Devotional art; Religious painting
ραφή
ανεξιθρησκία         
religious tolerance

Definition

zero tolerance
¦ noun strict enforcement of the law regarding any form of antisocial behaviour.

Wikipedia

Religious tolerance

Religious toleration may signify "no more than forbearance and the permission given by the adherents of a dominant religion for other religions to exist, even though the latter are looked on with disapproval as inferior, mistaken, or harmful". Historically, most incidents and writings pertaining to toleration involve the status of minority and dissenting viewpoints in relation to a dominant state religion. However, religion is also sociological, and the practice of toleration has always had a political aspect as well.: xiii 

An overview of the history of toleration and different cultures in which toleration has been practiced, and the ways in which such a paradoxical concept has developed into a guiding one, illuminates its contemporary use as political, social, religious, and ethnic, applying to LGBT individuals and other minorities, and other connected concepts such as human rights.

Examples of use of religious tolerance
1. Religious tolerance was replaced with sectarian violence.
2. The Pope speaks much of religious tolerance in his lecture.
3. Archbishop Nzimbi called for political and religious tolerance in Sudan.
4. Human Rights Council to examine the question of religious tolerance.
5. He was known for moderation and religious tolerance.